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By Vinnie
Apicella
What starts, ends, and sometimes an end yields a new beginning. Nod
and Paul Wright, brothers and integral parts of the acclaimed underground
Goth
Rock sound of the UK's Fields of the Nephilim, have come seemingly
from nowhere to develop a whole new design by way of "Guided By Light,"
their first new recording together in over four years. An album that
remains steeped in the classic Gothic architecture of years past with
a dynamic view of the future, an ambitious and atmospheric creation
that few could've expected amidst the continued conjecture of a full
fledged Fields' reunion record and tour. "That's the thing I have
to stress to everybody," begins Nod, "we never got back together again
fully. It was talked about to some extent, we briefly rehearsed together
and managed a certain amount of recording, but then it just never
materialized. So The Nephilim really didn't reform after all those
years apart and right now it still stands at the state from where
we first split up back in '91." Indeed the band did manage at least
two recordings, a precursor to the supposed album that was due later
in the year but there were seemingly endless delays, and attempts
to contact the band themselves to talk about the regrouping were destined
to die on the vine. After the initial breakup a decade ago, frontman
Carl McCoy would later go on to assemble the industrial
edged "Zoon" under the name Nefilim, while the Wright brothers and
the rest of the original band would go on to form Rubicon, a more
Rock
oriented project that lasted for a couple of albums before fading
into obscurity by the late '90s. "We did a couple of albums and a
limited amount of touring through Europe," continues Nod. "I think
the band just sort of fizzled out really. A lot of people probably
expected something a bit different I think after the Nephilim days
and it just didn't seem to really go anywhere." "Guided By Light"
in fact represents the first official recording since the Rubicon
days, save for the handful of F.O.T.M. tunes that may never see the
light of day, and Wright, perhaps answering a calling that the day
had finally arrived to step out into the light for a project of his
own making, and suddenly Last Rites was born. He continues: "It was
plucked out of the air basically. In the winter of 2000. to just sort
of sum up where we were at the time; how we felt, with preconceptions
of doing something good and then the disappointments of not doing
anything else for a while. So it was just being thrown up and down
and finally we said okay, it's time to get on with it. We felt bitter
at the time over a few things that had happened, so it was our attitude
to do this for ourselves this time instead of for other people." The
resulting release is nothing short of astounding. A veteran of the
Gothic/Metal underground scene for a number of years, even he must've
been surprised with the final product, though he'd admitted never
having fully listened to it with headphones for full effect, but the
music, faithful to the classic moments, fresh, vibrant, atmospheric,
superbly stark, edgy and dark with a fair degree of modern elements
and impressive sound quality
a triumphant return by all counts. Much of the new material came about
from unfinished pieces of the past. Nod discusses how the eight passages
for "Guided By Light" came to be: This turned out to be the first
official collection of songs that I've taken to the point where they
got finished. A lot of things I'd written in the past had been sitting
on the shelf without vocals on them. I just got to a point where I
needed an outlet. a release basically, cause I had an album's worth
of material but I had to go the extra yard where I could come up with
something without depending on other people to help produce it. There
are actually a few slightly older things on here that we'd been plucking
around quite a long time. But some of it was written immediately and
just became a matter of getting them down to complete the album."
On the nature of the album itself, its depth and the expected dark
imagery that surrounds it, he adds: "It's sort of like a particular
avenue with the darker or Gothic style music and some people just
tend to head down that particular road. It's nice to have that sort
of sense of atmosphere and power about it. But it doesn't always have
to have that particular Gothic tone and note in it. I don't think
the music's very instantaneous. There's no sort of immediate gratification
with some of the songs, it's deliberately drawn out to entice the
listener to go further into it. to explore, rather than instantly
moving from one track to the next and have the whole thing fly by.
There are many elements in there without it being too obvious." Songs
such as "Resolution," "Race a Train," or the seven plus minute closing
epic "The Powers That Be" prove that the listener is in for an adventuresome
journey that doesn't conclude after the first pass. An album with
durability, power, drama and emotional intensity, Wright's design
wasn't to approach lyrically, tales of expectation or drown the listener
in complete dread, but rather come from the more introspective angle
that will continue to hold significance long after the music's stopped.
"The music's pretty personal to a great extent, not something I feel
I need to hide behind, according to Wright. "Just a case of being
totally natural, feeling the things around me, experiences and so
forth. I could be quite temperamental sometimes, but emotionally.
in the mindset I was in, I was hoping the music could serve as a sort
of two
way gatefold on that front. If people can relate to certain sorts
of things and put themselves in that position, I'm sure they'll have
suffered some of the same experiences I had in the past and also enjoyed
some of the pleasant ones. So I think with 'Guided By Light,' they
can tiptoe through the lyrics and find themselves in there somewhere."
Having stuck close to home for the better part of four years since
what started, did in fact end for Rubicon, ("What Starts Ends"
1994 release) Nod's cautiously optimistic about taking Last Rites
on the road. With the record hitting the streets in early September,
Wright, in the spotlight for the first time for what's expected to
be an ongoing project of permanency, finds it a bit daunting to play
dual role of manager and performer. While the band is slated for a
handful of UK dates, time will tell once the record finally gets its
wings, and yet either way, Nod and his band will give little time
for dust to settle. "We don't have a lack of will to tour. I think
the UK gigs will be really good and I'm looking forward to them. After
that, we'll see how it goes. Right now there's an awful lot more responsibility
and sometimes the pressure gets ridiculous! (Laughs) But we want to
let people hear it and get on a tour, very much so. But I still feel
a bit stunted in a way cause I've been up for that in the past and
then we've been sort of kicked back in the teeth again. So it's been
a sort of stigma really, the idea of touring, and we'll have to prove
ourselves all over again, which is fine, but it just feels like it's
a bit tricky." UK
based fans can catch the band doing select shows in early and mid
September in cities like Cambridge, London and Oxford among others.
The band continues to work on coming up with new material and plans
for another album could already be in the works before the end of
the year and before they set out for a more extensive tour. For more
information on Last Rites, the band is expecting to be online soon
at which time they can be reached at: [www.lastrites.org.uk]
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